Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "McCulloch v. Maryland" ¶ 32
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Minutes and from
In one now-historic first interview, for example, the transcript ( reproduced from the book, The First Five Minutes ) goes like this: The therapist's level tone is bland and neutral -- he has, for example, avoided stressing `` you '', which would imply disapproval ; ;
From the April 1914 one-reeler Twenty Minutes of Love onwards he was writing and directing most of his films, by 1916 he was also producing them, and from 1918 he was even composing the music for them.
The book Minutes to Go resulted from his initial cut-up experiment: unedited and unchanged cut-ups which emerged as coherent and meaningful prose.
He worked as a scriptwriter for Peter Sellers and then on 39 episodes of his own radio show Round the Bend in 30 Minutes, which has also been wiped from the BBC archive.
Minutes later the first salvo of Soviet nuclear weapon strikes NATO targets in Western Europe, including RAF Finningley from Sheffield.
This proved somewhat less than satisfactory, however, because in order to accommodate CBS ' telecasts of late afternoon National Football League games, 60 Minutes went on hiatus during the fall from 1972 to 1975 ( and the summer of 1972 ).
It was only when the FCC returned an hour to the networks on Sundays ( for children's / family or news programming ), taken away from them four years earlier, in a 1975 amendment to the Access Rule that CBS finally found a viable permanent timeslot for 60 Minutes.
Minutes from the War Cabinet meeting were not sent to the King until 28 February, so that he did not have a prior chance to object.
In 1993 SPV Records had re-released the first two Psyche albums together on a special CD and a " best of " under the name " 69 Minutes of History " collecting Psyche's most played songs from 1987 – 1991.
Minutes later, Woodward was plucked from the roiling plunge pool beneath the Horseshoe Falls after grabbing a life ring thrown to him by the crew of the Maid of the Mist boat.
It was officially established on February 21, 1907 at the Royal Hotel in Bondi-as was recorded in the newspaper The East Sydney Argus, and in the Waverley Council Minutes acknowledging receipt of a letter from the newly formed group.
Carl Icahn received very favorable treatment from his 2008 profile on CBS's 60 Minutes.
* Captain Pinstripe ( referencing two of their songs from Elsewhere for 8 Minutes ).
A still photo from the episode's shoot scene with Mike Wallace is on page 68 of the book 60 Minutes ': 25 Years of Television's Finest Hour ( 1993 ) by Frank Coffey.
He later became a correspondent of the long-running Sunday night news show 60 Minutes, just as the program was moved from a Sunday afternoon time-slot to primetime.
The video of the CBS 60 Minutes program was subsequently withdrawn from the market.
Minutes later, radar stations report what appear to be inbound Soviet missiles from over the Arctic, as well as possible submarine-launched missiles heading toward the East Coast.
Jamestown appears to be referenced in the John Mellencamp song " Minutes to Memories " from his album Scarecrow.
Its full name is a parody of This Hour Has Seven Days, a CBC newsmagazine from the 1960s ; the " 22 Minutes " refers to the fact that a half-hour television program in Canada and the U. S. is typically 22 minutes long with eight minutes of commercials.
Martineau also discussed the fact that This Hour Has 22 Minutes is broadcast by the CBC and is funded by funds also coming from Quebec.
In November 2011, 60 Minutes alleged that Pelosi and several other member of Congress had used information they gleaned from closed sessions to make money on the stock market.
He showed his intention " absolutely not " to implement racial screenings in reply to the question from Steve Kroft on " 60 Minutes " right after 9-11.
From the musical Forty-five Minutes from Broadway.
Minutes before the transfer window closed, the club signed Robinho from Real Madrid for a British record transfer fee of £ 32. 5 million.

from and Court's
Thus, a finding of conspiracy to restrain trade or attempt to monopolize was excluded from the Court's decision.
" Caplan comments on the impact of the Supreme Court's decision making it necessary for there to be evidence of guilt in such a plea, " By requiring that there be some evidence of guilt in such a situation, the decision attempts to protect the ' really ' innocent from the temptations to which plea-bargaining and defense attorneys may subject them.
An example of a Court's treatment of frivolous arguments is found in the case of Crain v. Commissioner, 737 F. 2d 1417 ( 1984 ), from the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit:
" In Simpson v. Chesterfield County Board of Supervisors, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals held that the Supreme Court's holding in the Marsh case meant that the " Chesterfield County could constitutionally exclude Cynthia Simpson, a Wiccan priestess, from leading its legislative prayers, because her faith was not ' in the Judeo-Christian tradition.
In 1992, Rutgers professor Earl Maltz criticized the Supreme Court's decision in Planned Parenthood v. Casey for endorsing the idea that if one side can take control of the Court on an issue of major national importance ( as in Roe v. Wade ), that side can protect its position from being reversed " by a kind of super-stare decisis.
The Court's mandatory jurisdiction came from three sources ; the Optional Clause of the League of Nations, general international conventions and special bipartite international treaties.
Three cases were disposed of during the Court's first session, one during an extraordinary sitting between 8 January and 7 February 1923 ( the Tunis-Morocco Nationality Question ), four during the second ordinary sitting between 15 June 1923 and 15 September 1923 ( Eastern Carelia Question, S. S. Wimbledon Case, German Settlers Question, Acquisition of Polish Nationality Question ) and one during a second extraordinary session from 12 November to 6 December 1923 ( Jaworznia Question ).
The Printing Department, run from a single printing plant in Leiden, was created to allow the circulation of the Court's publishings.
In Chisholm v. Georgia,, the Supreme Court held that states were not immune from lawsuits by individuals due to the Supreme Court's Article III jurisdiction over them.
Yet both Justice Black and Justice Douglas dissented from the Supreme Court's 1957 decision in United States v. United Auto Workers, 352 U. S. 567 ( 1957 ), in which the Court, on procedural grounds, overruled a lower court decision striking down the prohibition on corporate and union political expenditures:
However, the Court denied such review in the second companion case because any harm from noncompliance with the FDA regulation at issue was too speculative in the Court's opinion to justify judicial review.
" Seven months after the Supreme Court's decision to grant, vacate, and remand, the DOI removed the land in question from trust.
The Brown decision of 1954 marked, in dramatic fashion, the radical shift in the Court's — and the nation's — priorities from issues of property rights to civil liberties.
Some replanting has occurred, but the Court's former appearance is far from being restored.
Permission to forcibly medicate Wanda Barzee was also sought, relying upon the U. S. Supreme Court's decision in Sell v. United States ( 2003 ), which permits compulsory medication when the state can demonstrate a compelling interest is served by restoring a person's competence and that medication would not harm the person or prevent him from defending himself.
The Court's 104-page opinion held that the Voting Rights Act is a colorblind statute and protects all voters from racial discrimination, regardless of the race of the voter.
There is also a list with cases from the Court's entire history ( large article ).
Bush v. Gore prompted many strong reactions from scholars, pundits, and others over the Court's decision.
" By World War II, such restrictive language had largely disappeared from real estate transactions, and all were voided by the Supreme Court's 1948 decision in Shelley v. Kraemer.
Application of the dormant commerce clause to state taxation is another manifestation of the Court's holdings that the Commerce Clause prevents a State from retreating into economic isolation or jeopardizing the welfare of the Nation as a whole, as it would do if it were free to place burdens on the flow of commerce across its borders that commerce wholly within those borders would not bear.
David P. Currie has remarked that the Court's decision in Adair is difficult to square with two of its other decisions that same year: Damselle Howard v. Illinois Central Railroad Company, in which the Court held that it was within Congress ' power to abrogate the fellow-servant rule ( which absolves an employer of liability for injury to a worker resulting from the negligence of a co-worker ) for railway employees injured in interstate commerce ; and Loewe v. Lawlor, in which it held that Congress could prevent union members from boycotting goods shipped from one state to another.
The Board of Education on January 9, 1942, adopted a resolution containing recitals taken largely from the Court's Gobitis opinion and ordering that the salute to the flag become " a regular part of the program of activities in the public schools ," that all teachers and pupils " shall be required to participate in the salute honoring the Nation represented by the Flag ; provided, however, that refusal to salute the Flag be regarded as an Act of insubordination, and shall be dealt with accordingly.

1.186 seconds.